Interesting George R. R. Martin trivia
1. Contrary to popular belief, George R. R. Martin’s middle initials are not a homage to J. R. R. Tolkien. Although George R. R. Martin is often referred to as ‘the American Tolkien’, it would appear that the two middle initials shared by both masters of fantasy literature are a coincidence and not a direct tribute to Tolkien on Martin’s part. Martin was born George Raymond Martin, and adopted a further middle name Richard upon his Catholic confirmation at age 13 (as, in fact, Martin himself confirms – as it were – in this video, at around 8:30 minutes in).
2. Martin began his writing ‘career’ by penning short stories, which he’d sell to classmates and neighbouring children. Many of the stories would feature monsters, and the going rate was just one cent. As well as providing a copy of the story, the young Martin would also throw in a spine-chilling performance of the tale.
3. The young George R. R. Martin also wrote about his pet turtles – and this provided the germ of the central idea of A Song of Ice and Fire. Martin would dream up stories involving ‘sinister plots’ hatched by the
4. Meanwhile, the title of Martin’s most famous series of novels was partly inspired by a Robert Frost poem. Frost’s short 1920 poem ‘Fire and Ice‘ has been named by Martin as part of the inspiration behind the title A Song of Ice and Fire.
5. George R. R. Martin gave up writing novels back in the early 1980s because one of his books was a flop. Martin’s fourth novel, The Armageddon Rag (1983), failed to sell, after his first few novels had done well. So he moved to Hollywood and started writing for various TV shows, including the revived Twilight Zone and Beauty and the Beast. Martin has attributed the taut plotting (and deft management of dozens of characters) of A Song of Ice and Fire to the ‘training’ he undertook while working in Hollywood. When asked what he likes to write about, he is fond of quoting William Faulkner: ‘the human heart in conflict with itself’. There is no simple good/evil binary on George R. R. Martin’s fantasy universe.
If you enjoyed these facts about George R. R. Martin, you might enjoy our J. R. R. Tolkien facts.
Image: George R. R. Martin speaking at the 2014 San Diego Comic Con International (photo credit: Gage Skidmore), Wikimedia Commons.